Friday, December 30, 2022

WISHFUL THINKING; WISHING FOR UNEMPLOYMENT

New Fed research flags rising risk of U.S. recession

“I don’t think anyone knows whether we’re going to have a recession or not and, if we do, whether it’s going to be a deep one or not. It’s just, it’s not knowable,” Powell said.


Michael S. Derby
Published Dec 30, 2022

NEW YORK — Just over half of the 50 U.S. states are exhibiting signs of slowing economic activity, breaching a key threshold that often signals a recession is in the offing, new research from the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank report said.

That report, released Wednesday, followed another report from the San Francisco Fed from earlier in the week that also delved into the rising prospect that the U.S. economy may fall into recession at some point in coming months.

The St. Louis Fed said in its report that if 26 states have falling activity within their borders, that offers “reasonable confidence” that the nation as a whole will fall into a recession.

Right now, the bank said that as measured by Philadelphia Fed data tracking the performance of individual states, 27 had declining activity in October. That’s enough to point to a looming downturn while standing short of the numbers that have been seen ahead of some other recessions. The authors noted that 35 states suffered declines ahead of the short and sharp recession seen in the spring of 2020, for example.

Meanwhile, a San Francisco Fed report, released Tuesday, observed that changes in the unemployment rate can also signal a downturn is on the way, in a signal that offers more near-term predictive value than the closely-watched bond market yield curve.

The paper’s authors said that the unemployment rate bottoms out and begins to move higher ahead of recession in a highly reliable pattern. When this shift occurs the unemployment rate is signaling the onset of recession in about eight months, the paper said.

The paper acknowledged its findings are akin to those of the Sahm Rule, named for former Fed economist Claudia Sahm, who pioneered work linking a rise in the jobless rate to economic downturns. The San Francisco Fed research, written by bank economist Thomas Mertens, said its innovation is to make the jobless rate change a forward-looking indicator.

Unlike the St. Louis Fed state data that is tipping toward a recession projection, the U.S. jobless rate has thus far remained fairly stable, and after bottoming at 3.5% in September, it held at 3.7% in both October and November.

The San Francisco Fed paper noted that the Fed, as of its December forecasts, sees the unemployment rate rising next year amid its campaign of aggressive rate hikes aimed at cooling high levels of inflation. In 2023, the Fed sees the jobless rate jumping up to 4.6% in a year where it sees only modest levels of overall growth.

If the Fed’s forecast comes to pass, “such an increase would trigger a recession prediction based on the unemployment rate,” the paper said. “Under this view, low unemployment can lead to a heightened probability of recession when the unemployment rate is expected to rise.”

Tim Duy, chief economist with SGH Macro Advisors, said he believes that to achieve what the Fed wants on the inflation front, the economy would likely “lose roughly two million jobs, which would be a recession like 1991 or 2001.”

Anxiety over the prospect of the economy falling into recession has been driven by the Fed’s forceful actions on inflation. Many critics contend that the central bank is focusing too much on inflation and not enough on keeping Americans employed. Central bank officials have countered that without a return to price stability, the economy will struggle to meet its full potential.

What’s more, in the press conference following the most recent Federal Open Market Committee meeting earlier this month, central bank leader Jerome Powell said that he didn’t view the current Fed outlook as a recession prediction given the expectation growth will remain positive. But he added much remains uncertain.

“I don’t think anyone knows whether we’re going to have a recession or not and, if we do, whether it’s going to be a deep one or not. It’s just, it’s not knowable,” Powell said.






 (Reporting by Michael S. Derby; Editing by Dan Burns and Aurora Ellis)
RUNNING AWAY FROM COUP ATTEMPT
‘Lost a battle but not the war’: Bolsonaro leaves Brazil ahead of Lula’s inauguration

Outgoing Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has left the country for the United States, avoiding the inauguration of incoming President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.


Reuters
Brasilia,
UPDATED: Dec 31, 2022 

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro attends an inauguration ceremony for new judges of Brazil's Superior Court of Justice in Brasilia, Brazil December 6, 2022.
 (Photo: Reuters File)

By Reuters:

 President Jair Bolsonaro left Brazil for the United States on Friday, 48 hours before his leftist rival President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was set to take office, saying in a teary goodbye speech he had "lost a battle but not the war."

Bolsonaro, who has barely spoken since losing the election, has not confirmed where he is going, but plane tracking data suggests he is heading to Florida, where his security staff are already in place.
He has repeatedly said he would not hand over the presidential sash to Lula at Sunday's inauguration, breaking with Brazil's democratic tradition.

He may also face legal risks from remaining in Brazil as his presidential immunity expires when Lula takes office.

Vice President Hamilton Mourao is now acting president, his press office told Reuters, confirming Bolsonaro had left the country. But Mourao will not pass the presidential sash to Lula either, a spokesperson said, raising questions about who will hand over the ceremonial ribbon to the leftist.

Website FlightAware, which monitors air traffic, showed the presidential plane departed Brasilia shortly after 2pm local time, bound for Orlando, Florida.

"I am in flight, back soon," Bolsonaro was quoted as saying by CNN Brasil. His press office did not respond to a request for comment.

The US State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The US embassy in Brasilia referred questions about Bolsonaro's trip to the Brazilian president's office.

FINAL WORDS


Before takeoff, Bolsonaro delivered an emotional final address on social media in which he ran through the highlights of his time in office, sought to defend his legacy, and tried to inspire his followers into keeping up the fight against Lula.

Some of his base have refused to accept Lula's victory, believing Bolsonaro's baseless claims that the October election was stolen. That has contributed to a tense atmosphere in the capital Brasilia, with riots and a foiled bomb plot last week.

READ: Brazil election body rejects Bolsonaro’s demand to invalidate votes, fines $4.3 million

Bolsonaro labeled the bomb plot a "terrorist act" for which there was no justification. He sought to distance himself from George Washington Sousa, the man who confessed to making the bomb, and who told police that Bolsonaro's call to arms inspired him to build an arsenal of guns and explosives.

"The man had ideas that are not shared by any citizen, but now they classify him as a 'Bolsonarista'," the president said.


Officials say President Bolsonaro may have left Brazil for Florida


By — Carla Bridi, Associated Press
By — Diane Jeantet, Associated Press
World Dec 30, 2022 

SAO PAULO (AP) — The office of Brazil’s vice president says he has become acting president, an indication that President Jair Bolsonaro has left the country and will break tradition by skipping the inauguration Sunday of his political nemesis, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

The press office of Bolsonaro’s vice president, Gen. Hamilton Mourão, confirmed to journalists he was acting as president. The handoff of power to the vice president occurs whenever Brazil’s president travels abroad.

The Friday edition of the official gazette said that Bolsonaro is headed to Florida, and that several officials were given permission to accompany “the future ex-president” to Miami between Jan. 1 and Jan. 30, to offer “advice, security and personal support.”

According to flight tracking websites, the Brazilian military’s official airplane left the capital, Brasilia, around 2 p.m. for Orlando.

READ MORE: Brazil’s Lula pledges ‘big fight’ against deforestation at COP27

In Bolsonaro’s absence, it is not clear who will hand over the presidential sash to Lula on Sunday. Mourão’s press office said that is not part of the vice president’s duties.

Bolsonaro has remained mostly silent since losing the election Oct. 30. But a few hours before reports of his departure, he addressed the country as president on his social media.

At times on the verge of tears, the far-right politician said he wasn’t able to find a legal alternative or enough support to change the course of history and prevent his departure from office.

“How difficult it has been to stay quiet for two months, working to find alternatives,” he said. “If you’re upset, put yourself in my place. I gave my life to this country.”

Bolsonaro also condemned a recent bomb threat in Brasilia, saying it was not the time to attack people, but rather to try to build an opposition against the future government.

“We lost a battle, but we will not lose the war,” he said. “The world does not end on Jan. 1.”

A crowd of supporters stood outside the presidential residence in a pouring rain listening for a sign from their leader, and many were left disappointed. Some shouted the words “traitor” and “coward.” One woman cried.

Since his electoral loss, some of Bolsonaro’s most die-hard supporters have been camping outside military buildings in Brasilia and elsewhere in the country, asking for the armed forces to intervene. Many believed election results were fraudulent or unreliable, and hoped Bolsonaro would somehow remain in power.

Others have blocked roads and highways, or set buses and trucks on fire. Police are also investigating the attempted invasion of the federal police’s headquarters in Brasilia earlier this month, and said most of the 32 individuals they are looking for have had contacts with the Brasilia pro-Bolsonaro encampment.

Jeantet reported from Rio de Janeiro. Associated Press photojournalist Eraldo Peres in Brasilia contributed to this report.

Bolsonaro followers arrested in coup d'état probe

Friday, December 30th 2022 - 
One of the Bolsonaristas arrested calls himself a “defender of the homeland.”

At least eight raids were carried out Thursday and four followers of outgoing President Jair Bolsonaro were arrested for their alleged involvement in a plot to prevent President-elect Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from taking office this coming Sunday.

“The crimes under investigation are those of qualified damage, arson, criminal association, violent abolition of the rule of law and coup d'état, whose combined maximum penalties amount to 34 years in prison,” said the Federal Police (PF) in a statement after taking into custody four Bolsonaristas following 32 search and seizure warrants in eight states under orders from the Supreme Federal Court (STF).

On December 24 one of Bolsonaro's followers linked to a group of opponents camped outside the army headquarters in Brasilia confessed to making a bomb to trigger a military uprising.

Thursday's deployment was linked to the Dec. 12 incidents when PF premises were attacked and cars set fire following the arrest of a pro-Bolsonaro indigenous leader, it was reported.

In the meantime, Lula's relatives were advised not to leave their hotel out of security concerns.

According to Folha de Sao Paulo, four people have been arrested in Rio de Janeiro, Rondônia, and Brasília. One of the Bolsonaristas arrested in Brasilia was identified as Klio Hirano, who calls himself a “defender of the homeland” and participated in camps in front of the Army barracks in Brasília.

Also arrested was Átilla Reginaldo Franco de Melo, 41. He campaigned for Bolsonaro in October and even stopped by the Army Headquarters camp in Brasília, along with his wife.

STF Justice Alexandre De Moraes temporarily suspended all authorizations for citizens to bear arms in the Federal District until January 2. Under Bolsonaro, Brazil opened up to people buying guns to arm themselves in self-defense.

Brazil is going through a week marred with uncertainty. Press reports kept announcing that Bolsonaro would fly to Florida for New Year's Eve not to take part in Lula's inauguration. The incumbent head of state has denied all those rumors, which he dubbed as “fake.”

Brazilian investigators find Bolsonaro committed incitement to crime

Thursday, December 29th 2022 - 
If prosecuted, Bolsonaro faces between three and six months in prison for unlawful conduct

Brazil's Federal Police (PF) has found evidence proving that President Jair Bolsonaro might have committed the crime of spreading false information about the Covid-19 pandemic when he linked the use of vaccines to the development of the AIDS virus

In the final report submitted to Superior Federal Court (STF) Justice Alexandre De Moraes, the investigators believe Bolsonaro should be held accountable for encouraging people not to wear masks.

The investigation was opened at the request of the Senate's Covid Parliamentary Investigative Committee (CPI) after a live broadcast in which Bolsonaro falsely linked vaccines' use to the development of the AIDS virus. Bolsonaro also claimed that most victims died from pneumonia caused by the use of a mask.

The PF requested De Moraes' authorization in August to indict Bolsonaro and take his statement, but the magistrate remained silent. The PF had also requested the Office of the Solicitor General to hear Bolsonaro but to no avail. Bolsonaro's incitement to crime and a misdemeanor for “causing alarm, announcing disaster or non-existent danger” were signaled at that time. Both findings were maintained in the final report released Wednesday.

Bolsonaro was summoned to testify earlier this month but he chose to remain silent.

The PF's final document was delivered to De Moraes, who must now forward it to the Attorney General's Office for a final decision on whether to charge Bolsonaro or not. If prosecuted, Bolsonaro faces between three and six months in prison for unlawful conduct.
Putin's 'rocket man' becomes latest senior Russian official to mysteriously die - days after top former Kremlin general was found dead on Christmas Day

Man who made Putin's dreams of space exploration possible has died aged 74

He is the fourth senior official with Russian links to die mysteriously in days

There have been suggestions Putin is 'clearing out' his inner circle and critics

Alexander Buzakov and General Alexei Maslov both suddenly died this week

Putin critic and sausage tycoon Pavel Antov fell to his death before Christmas


By WILL STEWART and BRITTANY CHAIN FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED:  30 December 2022

The man who made Vladimir Putin's dreams of space exploration possible has died aged 74.

Vladimir Nesterov, is the latest casualty this year among Russia's elite and the fourth official reported dead in a matter of days.

He pioneered the new 'world's best' Angara rocket and was the former general director of the Khrunichev Centre, which Putin hoped would facilitate Russia's first manned mission to the moon

Since 2014, Nesterov has been dogged by persistent allegations of fraud and embezzlement.



Vladimir Nesterov, is the latest casualty this year among Russia's elite and the fourth senior official reported dead in a matter of days



He pioneered the new 'world's best' Angara rocket and was the former general director of the Khrunichev Centre, which Putin hoped would facilitate Russia's first manned mission to the moon

Authorities accused him of pocketing upwards of £57million, and he had been under house arrest pending further investigation.

Nesterov's cause of death has not been revealed.

Alexander Buzakov, 65, director general of Admiralty Shipyards, in charge of building new submarines armed with deadly Kalibr missiles, also unexpectedly died earlier this week.

And General Alexei Maslov, 69, former commander of Russian ground forces with close ties to Ukraine, died 'suddenly' on Christmas day, after Putin abruptly cancelled a trip to the tank enterprise where he worked as an international sales ambassador.

Buzakov had been healthy the day before he died, and 'nothing had been heard about Maslov's health problems'.


Authorities accused him of pocketing upwards of £57million, and he had been under house arrest pending further investigation. Nesterov's cause of death has not been revealed



Days earlier, Alexander Buzakov (left), 65, d in charge of building new submarines armed with deadly Kalibr missiles, also suddenly died. And General Alexei Maslov (right) , 69, former commander of Russian ground forces with close ties to Ukraine, died 'suddenly' on Christmas day

Maslov had been commander-in-chief of Russian ground forces between 2004 and 2008.

Similarly, sausage tycoon and Russian MP Pavel Antov, 65, fell to his death from a window in an Indian hotel in another case that has aroused suspicion.

In June, Antov criticised the war and air strikes on Kyiv as Russian 'terror' wounding Ukrainian civilians.

He highlighted a Russian missile strike and said: 'A girl has been pulled out from under the rubble, the girl's father appears to have died.

'The mother is trying to be pulled out with a crane - she is trapped under a slab. To tell the truth, it is extremely difficult to call this anything other than terror.'

He evidently then swiftly came under intense pressure after which he withdrew the comment and made a grovelling apology.

He made an about-turn and claimed his post on social media had been 'an unfortunate misunderstanding' and a 'technical error'.

He insisted he had 'always supported the president' and 'sincerely' backed the goals of Putin's military operation - but local journalists strongly disputed this.

This year, at least 10 Russian oligarchs and critics have died under mysterious circumstances, amid suggestions Putin is 'cleansing' his inner circle.



Russian MP Pavel Antov, 65, who previously criticised the war in Ukraine, was found dead in India after 'falling from a third floor hotel window'
Argentina wheat exports at their lowest, but record year for fertilizer consumption

Friday, December 30th 2022 - 
Total consumption of fertilizers in Argentina added to 4.54 million tons in 2021/22, setting a record, reported the Buenos Aires Grain Exchange

Bad and good news from Argentina. Wheat exports are expected to hit their lowest point in eight years because of climate effects, especially La Niña ravaging the country’s crops for the third consecutive reason, points out the Rosario Grains Exchange (BCR)

Argentina’s foreign sales declarations (DJVE), which account for the volumes already committed to exports, are close to 8.9 million tons. However, the government allowed part of this volume to be exported in the next season since there were not enough stocks available this season.

Season-ending stocks are forecast at 1.72m tons, the lowest in five seasons. In 2017/18, there were 1.2 million tons in stock. Production in the current season is forecast at 11.5 million tons, half of last year’s 23 million. This is the lowest crop since 10.9 million in 2014/15. Productivity, at 2.3 tons per hectare, is the weakest since 2008/09, when 2.11 tons per hectare were harvested.

Finally, Argentine wheat prices reported by industry regulators, measured in dollars per ton and converted at the official exchange rate, show values much higher than the market average and are the highest since 2012/13.

On the bright side, total consumption of fertilizers in Argentina added to 4.54 million tons in 2021/22, setting a record, reported the Buenos Aires Grain Exchange. The volume was 12% higher than the previous harvest season.

The increase in acreage and the increase in the number of applications drove the growth. The area destined for corn grew by 900 thousand hectares (13%), and those for wheat and barley grew by 500 thousand hectares (3% and 33%, respectively).

According to the exchange, the crops that most consumed fertilizers were corn and wheat, with 37% and 33% of the total used in the country. Soybeans accounted for 16% of the volume, barley for 7%, and sunflower for 3%.

Nitrogenous fertilizers were the most used, representing 59% of the total. Phosphates accounted for the other 41%.

Argentine wheat crop, one of the least productive in recent history

Wednesday, December 28th 2022
The 11,5 million tons of this year's harvest is half the 2021/22 crop, according to the Rosario Grains Exchange.

The Argentine wheat crop, 2022/23 is again suffering the consequences of a prolonged drought and lack of sufficient rain, which means that the overall estimate volume has again been reduced by 300,000 tons to a total of 11,5 million tons, according to the Rosario Grains Exchange.

This is half the 2021/22 crop, which was a record, and the contraction this season was not greater because the province of Entre Rios surprised with some extraordinary yields.

The Rosario Grains Exchange also pointed out that the main losses happened in the rich fields of the provinces of Cordoba, Buenos Aires and Santa Fe, where in only a month estimates were down 300,000 tons. With domestic consumption of some nine million tons, surplus for exports has been considerably reduced.

“We had an average yield fo 2,300 kilos per hectare, the lowest recorded since 2010”, pointed out the Rosario Grains Exchange. But in Entre Rios yields were excellent and helped the overall average. Temperature played a crucial role, 15 Celsius during the maturing period with abundant humidity. And this despite a month of November with insufficient humidity and consecutive frosts, but Entre Rios prevailed and had a production of 3,900 kilos per hectare“.

Cordoba on the other hand continues with its production disaster. Compared to the 3,600 kilos per hectares of last year, this season it is down to 1,500 kilos, following on the effects of frosts. Something similar can be said of the Buenos Aires province. Last year Santa Fe province had a yield close to 3,900 kilos per hectare, but nowadays the average is hardly 2,200 kilos per hectare”, concluded the Rosario Grains Exchange.

Cotopaxi volcano fumes have Ecuador under alert

Monday, December 26th 2022 
The first warning this year about the Cotopaxi had been issued on Oct. 21

Ecuadorian authorities have been placed on alert after a 1,500-meter column of steam, gas, and ash emanated Sunday from the Cotopaxi volcano, it was reported.

The National Polytechnic School's Geophysical Institute confirmed that the volcano was clear at 5.50 am local time until the emission of steam, gas, and ash was observed in a south-easterly direction.

Sunday's episode follows some ash detected last Thursday in Quito, which is believed to stem from the Cotopaxi and arrived there due to strong winds.

The Geophysical Institute reported an increase in seismic signals on Oct. 21 from the volcano in the Andean mountain range, just 45 kilometers southeast of Quito, so a full eruption is expected anytime soon.

The Cotopaxi is one of the most active volcanoes in Ecuador. At 5,897 meters above sea level, it is the second-highest peak in the country and together with the Sangay and Reventador volcanoes (both in the Amazon region), is currently among the most active in the country.

Ecuador has over fifty volcanoes, most of them in the Andean region, although there are others in the Amazon region and in the Galapagos Islands.

FIRE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE WORLD

Tierra del Fuego fires still smoldering
Friday, December 30th 2022 -
It has been already a month since a bonfire apparently went out of control

One month after the forest fires started in the Argentine province of Tierra del Fuego, the authorities are still unable to put down the flames as new “hot spots” keep being found with over 100 firefighters deployed. Over 9,000 hectares of native forests burned down, it was reported.

According to the Government of Tierra del Fuego, the fire in the “Corazón de la Isla” reserve about 50 kilometers from Tolhuin, is “contained.” In other words, it is limited to a specific perimeter but it is not yet “controlled” due to the continuous appearance of secondary outbreaks.

After the province sought assistance from the federal government, some 100 firefighters of the National Fire Management Service (SNMF) flew in from different parts of the country to help the Provincial Fire Management Directorate, volunteer firefighters, provincial park rangers, and Civil Defense, in addition to Federal Police, and the Argentine Navy.

The provincial government has already allocated some AR$ 230 million (around US$ 657,000 at the unofficial exchange rate) to bring two hydrant planes and a helicopter to fly over the area spraying water, using an airfield in Tolhuin as a base.

The forest fire resulted in the total prohibition of fire lighting in wild areas determined by the Fuegian government in adherence to national regulations, and in tougher controls to enforce this restriction.

Regarding the origin of the fire in “Corazón de la isla,” judiciary sources said Tolhuin Judge José Pellegrino excused himself from continuing to lead the case because a piece of evidence requested by the investigation involves a former client of his when he was practicing law independently.

Based on telephone audios of local ranchers, investigators believe they have identified the two fishermen who would have started the crisis after a bonfire went wild due to strong winds.
ABOLISH SCOTUS
US Supreme Court appeals to 1944 law to expel asylum seekers at border
Wednesday, December 28th 2022 -
Immigration advocates and the Biden administration moved to repeal the law, but 19 Republican-leaning states along the border pushed back with their own lawsuit to keep it in place.

The United States Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that a pandemic-era health measure used to limit immigration will say in place indefinitely. The restriction, known as Title 42, has been used by officials to expel asylum seekers. In all, it has been deployed some 2.5 million times and turned away many more at the border.

Immigration advocates and the Biden administration moved to repeal the law, but 19 Republican-leaning states along the border pushed back with their own lawsuit to keep it in place.

“The court is not going to decide until June, apparently, and in meantime we have to enforce it. But I think it's overdue,” Biden told reporters at the White House.

“The states contend that they face an immigration crisis at the border and policymakers have failed to agree on adequate measures to address it,” the Supreme Court said in its 5-4 ruling on Tuesday.

“The only means left to mitigate the crisis, the states suggest, is an order from this Court directing the federal government to continue its COVID-era Title 42 policies as long as possible.”

However, in their dissenting opinion, justices Neil Gorsuch and Ketanji Brown Jackson argued that “the current border crisis is not a COVID crisis.

Title 42 is named after the section of the 1944 public health law it is based on. But the rule was introduced under former US President Donald Trump in early 2020.

The measure allows authorities to remove foreigners without any legal process or formal deportation to their country of origin if they are found to have entered the country without a visa.

Critics branded Title 42 as an ”inhumane” rule that was unfit as both health policy and immigration policy. Meanwhile, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said in April that vaccination rates meant the COVID-era policy was no longer necessary.

“We are deeply disappointed for all the desperate asylum seekers who will continue to suffer because of Title 42, but we will continue fighting to eventually end the policy,'' said Lee Gelernt, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union, which had been lobbying to end Title 42's use.

Ahead of Tuesday's ruling, thousands of migrants gathered on the Mexican side of the border. The White House said it it is preparing to manage the border ”in a secure, orderly, and humane way when Title 42 eventually lifts.”
NASA wants ideas to boost Hubble Space Telescope into a higher orbit with private spaceships
published 1 day ago

A study by SpaceX to use private spacecraft to reboost the Hubble Space Telescope has NASA weighing options to give Hubble new life.

A study by SpaceX to use private spacecraft to reboost the Hubble Space Telescope has NASA weighing options. (Image credit: NASA/SpaceX)


NASA is looking deeper into the possibility of using a private spacecraft to lift the Hubble Space Telescope to new heights, giving the influential space observatory a new lease on life.


On Dec. 22, the space agency issued a Request for Information regarding a non-exclusive SpaceX study earlier this year that suggested how the Hubble Space Telescope could be "reboosted" into a higher orbit.

NASA's request for information, which you can read here, comes as it continues to consider the space telescope's future and will remain open until Jan. 24, 2023.

Related: The best Hubble Space Telescope images of all time

Since the start of Hubble's operations in 1990, the orbit of the space telescope 335 miles (540 kilometers) above Earth has been decaying. Reboosting it to an orbit that is both higher and more stable could add years to Hubble’s operating lifetime delaying the point at which NASA must deorbit or dispose of the telescope.

During its five space shuttle missions to the service Hubble, NASA used the shuttle to reboost the telescope. The last shuttle servicing mission to Hubble was in 2009. NASA retired its shuttle fleet in 2011.

The idea to raise Hubble to a higher orbit using a Dragon spacecraft at no cost to the government was first developed between SpaceX and Polaris Program, a private program of space missions using SpaceX's Dragon and Starship vehicles funded by billionaire Jared Isaacman. The unfunded agreement between SpaceX and NASA to study the feasibility of reboosting Hubble was then signed in September 2022.

The SpaceX study was designed to help NASA, which currently has no plans to operate or fund a new Hubble servicing mission, determine the commercial possibility of such a mission. The SpaceX study also aimed to lay out the technical challenges of such a servicing endeavor.
 
The fact the study is non-exclusive means that other companies are free to propose their own Hubble servicing studies based on the use of different rockets or spacecraft.

These studies will collect data from Hubble itself and from SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft to assess the possibility of safely rendezvousing and docking with the space telescope before shunting it to a higher stable orbit. The studies are expected to take around 6 months to complete.

"This study is an exciting example of the innovative approaches NASA is exploring through private-public partnerships,” associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington, Thomas Zurbuchen, said in a statement.(opens in new tab) "As our fleet grows, we want to explore a wide range of opportunities to support the most robust, superlative science missions possible."

The operation to reboost Hubble would demonstrate how older satellites and spacecraft could be given extended operating lives, especially those in near-Earth orbits like the space telescope.

"SpaceX and the Polaris Program want to expand the boundaries of current technology and explore how commercial partnerships can creatively solve challenging complex problems," said Jessica Jensen, vice president of Customer Operations & Integration at SpaceX. "Missions such as servicing Hubble would help us expand space capabilities to ultimately help all of us achieve our goals of becoming a space-faring, multiplanetary civilization."
RIP
Dame Vivienne Westwood: How the ‘visionary’ designer put the punk into Scotland’s textile industry

She put a rebel spirit back into tartan and forged a deep connection with Scotland and its craftspeople in a weaver’s shed on Lewis more than 30 years ago.

By Alison Campsie



Vivienne Westwood died on Thursday

Dame Vivienne Westwood, who died peacefully on Thursday at the age of 81, has been remembered for her impact on the Scottish textile industry, which she pulled into the punk, the modern and the hotly desirable while flying its flag on the worldwide stage.

Lorna Macaulay, chief executive of the Harris Tweed Authority, said Dame Vivienne was a “a visionary and way ahead of her time” who recognised the importance of Scottish textiles long before others.

Dame Vivienne first visited the Outer Hebrides in the late 1980s at a time when Harris Tweed clothing was favoured by “your dad and mine,” Ms Macaulay said. She met Ian Angus Mackenzie, now chief executive at Harris Tweed Hebrides, at his weaving shed in Vatisker on the Isle of Lewis.



'Harris Tweed' crown hats created by Vivienne Westwood

Ms Macaulay said: “Suddenly, we had this design icon use Harris Tweed when it had previously been reserved for our dad’s jackets , for Sunday best, and always in these neutral tones. Vivienne moved it into these wild colour schemes, particularly for the tartans and checks, She was always push, push, push for these very vibrant colours.

She added: “I can only imagine that these conversations with the mill designers would have been like a breath of fresh air for them. At this time, our business was held up by our three button men’s sports jacket, which is still an incredibly important part of of what we do. But in those days, the designers would have welcomed that edge she brought.”

Ms Macaulay said a number of Vivienne Westwood garments were held in the Harris Tweed Authority archives , including a waistcoat with detachable sleeves that were held together with “nappy pins” and covered with orbs, the consumers’ mark used by Harris Tweed since 1909 to guarantee it’s authenticity.

The designer’s adoption of her own orb logo resulted in a long-running legal wrangle in the 1990s, with it ultimately decided that both designs could co-exist.


Vivienne Westwood tartan suit, mid 1990s.

Ms Macaulay added : “Our industry is small, it is niche and it’s luxury and every season we need the order of such an iconic design house such as Vivienne Westwood, because the rest follow.

“Many design houses chose not to name the textile brands they work with as they see it as diluting their own story. But Vivienne always gave us a name check and that was so powerful for us.”


Ms Macaulay said that the support of Vivienne Westwood had helped Harris Tweed become “hugely well recognised” in Asia.

Today, a number of her designs sit in National Museum of Scotland and V&A Dundee, where a tweed tartan jacket, checked wool trousers and waistcoat produced by Dame Vivienne around 1995 can be found.

Assistant curator James Wylie said: "Westwood's mark on Scottish textiles is unparalleled and the suit acts as a microcosm of her love of weaving north of Gretna Green.”

The key moments of Vivienne Westwood's career that changed the landscape of fashion

 By Veronica Apap
Vivienne Westwood, "If you ever wanted to feel 6ft tall you’d wear my clothes"

Fashion iconoclast Vivienne Westwood said she created clothes for heroes.

"Anyone who wants to feel romantic about themselves. If you ever wished you were 6 feet tall and you weren't, you just wear some of my clothes and that's what you'll feel like."

Westwood, who died on Thursday, practised what she preached: When she met the Queen in 1992, she arrived at Buckingham Palace without knickers. We know this because she bravely did a twirl in front of the paparazzi pack in the palace courtyard.
Vivienne Westwood meets Queen Elizabeth II at a reception at Buckingham Palace in 1999.(AFP: Fiona Hanson/pool)

Fashion podcaster Avery Trufelman said Westwood's attitude was the calling card of her work throughout the decades.

"The bit of irreverence and cheekiness was always key in Vivienne's work," Trufelman said. "She was always giving a bit of a wink and not taking herself too seriously.

Vivienne Westwood dies aged 81
English fashion designer Vivienne Westwood dies "peacefully and surrounded by her family", aged 81.



"And yet, at the same time, a hallmark of Vivienne's work was a fierce commitment to beauty. She was devoted to creating the most fantastical, strange surreal visions of beauty she could possibly summon. It always came through across every collection and every decade — in the absurdity and the levity — the gorgeousness came through."

Despite starting out with no formal training, Westwood's influence on global fashion was enormous.

"Whatever is ripped or dirty, whatever is transgressive and strange, it owes its lineage in some way to Vivienne," Ms Trufelman said.

"She was the anti-fashion fashion designer, who sought to find new ways of draping and ripping and patching that was unexpected and surprising. From Hot Topic to Martin Margiela, everyone has taken a page from her book."

Whether she was dressing the punks of London streets in the 70s, the supermodels of the 90s, or herself as former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, Westwood's fashion choices epitomised non-conformity and pushed her anti-establishment agenda.

Here are the four biggest fashion trends Westwood gave the world.

Punk


When the Sex Pistols burst onto the underground music scene in the mid-1970s, they were clad in leather, studs, chains, torn fabrics and padlocks.

But they didn't invent this punk style. It was the brainchild of Vivienne Westwood and her partner Malcolm McLaren, the Sex Pistols' manager.

Vivienne Westwood (right) ran a shop together with Sex Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren.(Getty Images: Daily Mirror/Bill Kennedy)

Westwood and McLaren ran a shop at 430 King's Road, London from 1971. Westwood was in her early 30s at the time and a primary school teacher who sewed all the clothes in her living room. She had no formal training.

The shop was continually closing, renaming and re-opening with new styles. It started out as Let it Rock, then became Too Fast to Live Too Young to Die.

In 1974 it was rebranded SEX and borrowed materials, styles and hardware from the sex industry.

Westwood appreciated the "strange beauty" of latex and rubber according to Victoria and Albert Museum senior curator Claire Wilcox. She told the Articles of Interest podcast in 2018 that the clothes featured in SEX were covered in straps, skin tight and androgynous.

"[Westwood] said the mix of clientele when it was called SEX ranged from, as she said, people with a perverse interest in these types of garments and then kids off the street just wanting to be fashionable. So, it was sort of this hybrid moment," Ms Wilcox said.

Models dressed in Westwood's fashions from the Seditionaries boutique in 1977.
(Getty Images: Daily Mirror)

The store re-launched again in 1977 and became known as Seditionaries. Ms Trufelman said it was this iteration of the store in which punk fashion truly emerged.

"Elements of Edwardian dandy, rocker, biker and sex worker all combined, catalysed with hard, fast music and political imagery," she said.

One reason Westwood's style proliferated so readily was anyone could follow her lead.

"It was part of this shared movement of rebellion that these clothes could be adopted and customised and adapted by anybody," Ms Wilcox said.

"Wherever you came from, however rich or poor. However old you were. Whatever sex you were, you could take these clothes on, perhaps you might save up to buy a pair of bondage trousers, but you'd customise your own T-shirt."
Pirate

In 1981 Westwood and McLaren held their first official collaborative catwalk show called Pirate.

Westwood's focus had moved from punk to 18th century dandies, Native American dress and plundering the Third World. The result was a collection filled with bright gold, oranges and yellows evoking images of bandits, buccaneers and dandies.The "Pirates" fashion show of 1981-82 was the first catwalk show of Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren.(Getty Images: David Corio/Redferns)

The series was romantic, unisex and became the look of choice for pop stars who formed the New Romantics movement like Boy George and Adam Ant. In fact, the latter hired McLaren for a post-punk re-branding six months after the Pirate catwalk show.

Author and former Vogue Australia editor-in-chief Kirstie Clements said Westwood really changed the landscape.

"I think one of the strongest fashion collections she ever did was the Pirate collection that she did in the early 80s," she told ABC News Breakfast.

"That influenced the new romantic era of puffy pirate blouses and Adam Ant.

"Again, that metaphor of challenging things and making a surprise appearance so to speak. You know, creating chaos."

Former Vogue editor Kirstie Clements says Westwood changed the fashion landscape.


The pagan years

In the late 80s Westwood moved to parodying the upper classes in an era she referred to as "the pagan years".

During this time her collections were influenced by ancient Greece and classic British tailoring with looks that referenced riding habits, wool suiting and men's Regency era tight-fitting pants.

Fashion historian Lydia Edwards said Westwood was one of the most historically conscious fashion designers of all time.

"She incorporated often very subtle references into her designs and gave relevance to various historical periods," she said.

"She also did so unsentimentally, without the rose-coloured glasses and 'nostalgic vintage' mirror that is so common these days."


In 1987 she launched her Harris Tweed collection. Westwood was instrumental in reviving the use of the only fabric in the world protected by its own act of parliament.

Under the act, Harris Tweed must be made from pure virgin wool that has been dyed and spun on the Outer Hebrides islands of Scotland and handwoven at the home of a weaver. The tweed is crafted without the use of automation or electricity.

Westwood used the tweed to create suiting with detachable elements inspired by medieval armour.

Anglomania


In the 90s Westwood created an aesthetic influenced by the elegance of British tailoring and the French love of exaggerated proportions.

The Anglomania collection of 1993/94 included tartan, furs, kilts, puffy silhouettes and very high heels – including those blue, nine-inch faux crocodile skin platforms Naomi Campbell famously fell over while wearing on a Paris runway in 1993.

In a 2019 British Vogue interview with Westwood, Campbell said there was a trick to walking in a pair of Westwood's sky-high platform shoes: you need to walk on your tip-toes.

Apparently the reason Campbell came undone on the catwalk was because she was wearing rubber tights under a plaid skirt. The tights caught at the thigh mid-stride and Campbell's right ankle buckled before she tripped over the shoes, crashing to the floor and landing on her behind

To her credit she burst out laughing, got up and finished the show including doing another lap of the runway in those same heels.

The Anglomania collection also featured an original tartan design by Westwood.

She had invented her own clan, MacAndreas — named after her husband Andreas Kronthaler – and had the tartan officially recognised and woven by Locharron of Scotland. The tartan is included in the Scottish Register of Tartans.

Naomi Campbell on stage at the Vivienne Westwood Fall 1994 fashion show in Paris.(Getty Images: PL Gould)

Ms Trufelman said Westwood's strength was in her ability to change, grow and innovate.

"She stayed relevant until her very passing," she said.

"She was pivotal at every step of her career, that's what made her memorable.

"Westwood changed what we think beauty is. She made it dishevelled and dyed and ripped and strange. She paved the way for so many misfits across the decades and taught us there was elegance and strength in the periphery."

Vivienne Westwood (1941 - 2022)

Vivienne Westwood (1941 - 2022) - You will be missed. 

By David Mouriquand • Updated: 30/12/2022 

Pioneering fashion designer Dame Vivienne Westwood will be missed.

The former primary school teacher was one of the most brilliant fashion designers of all time, a rebel with a flare of the theatrical, who injected her love for anarchy, fun, sex and the avant-garde into her iconoclastic designs.

She pushed the boundaries when it came to colour and print, and shaped the UK punk movement and street style in the 70s, earning her the title 'The Queen of Punk'.

Fashion designer Vivienne Westwood dies, aged 81

Subversive fashion: France's first exhibition dedicated to Vivienne Westwood opens in Lyon

Her frequently subversive and always cutting-edge designs were worn by actors, activists, musicians and artists across genres and gender.

She experienced something of a resurgence in the last few years, as a new generation of celebrities like Harry Styles, Dua Lipa, Zendaya and Timothée Chalamet could be seen on red carpets and awards shows draped in Westwood’s memorable threads.

From tartan chic, kilts, rips and safety pins to some flamboyant androgynous looks, she leaves a legacy like no other.

Here are some of Westwood’s most iconic looks

The Sex PistolsGetty Images
Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLarenGetty Images
Westwood in SEXDavid Dagley - REX

Vivienne Westwood met Malcolm McLaren in the early 70s. His shop on Kings Road in London – which became the famed boutique SEX – was punk legend. She created the Sex Pistols’ iconic looks – from the pins to the straightjackets and the God Save The Queen shirts – and designed clothes for future Pretenders frontwoman Chrissie Hynde.

Sara Stockbridge -1987Chris Barham - Shutterstock

Sara Stockbridge walks for Vivienne Westwood at London Fashion Week, 1987
.
Showing up to receive an OBE
Martin Keene PA ArchivePress Association Images

Showing up to receive an OBE from Queen Elizabeth in 1992 and bypassing all the strict style protocols by wearing a grey suit with no underwear.
90s runway look by WestwoodGetty Images

Westwood’s FW90 “Portrait Collection,” an iconic moment in 90s runway fashion.
Carla Bruni - FW94Getty Images

Carla Bruni – Fashion Week 1994.
Naomi Campbell - 94Getty Images

Naomi Campbell – Fashion Week 1994
Kate Moss - 1995Getty Images

Kate Moss walks for Vivienne Westwood's Erotic Zones Spring / Summer 1995 show.
Westwood with Laetitia Casta - 1996Getty Images

Her bridal looks were the hit of the runways in the mid-90s. Here with French model Laetitia Casta at the Paris Fashion Week Fall / Winter 1996.
Pamela Anderson - 2009Getty Images

Pamela Anderson wearing Westwood’s iconic upturned tutu at the Paris Fashion Week Fall / Winter 2009.

Emma Thompson - 2010Fred Duval FilmMagic via Getty

Emma Thompson wearing a brown strapless Westwood design - and is accompanied by a pig, London in 2010.

Dita von Teese's wedding dressGetty Images

Queen of Burlesque Dita von Teese wearing a custom-made dramatic purple wedding dress by Westwood.
Westwood protesting - 2013John Stillwell PA

Westwood actively supported climate causes and championed human rights throughout her life, including giving a shout out to the Just Stop Oil activists this year. She is here seen at a protest outside the Russian Embassy in London in support of the 30 Greenpeace activists charged with piracy at a Russian oil platform – October 2013.

MORE PHOTOS



SCOTLAND
Constituents 'bitterly disappointed' over MP's lack of support for junior doctor strike

"I think that's the perspective of everyone in Sleaford"


NEWS By Sebastian Mann
Community reporter, 30 DEC 2022

Sleaford resident Kathleen Howarth, 85. (Image: Lincolnshire Live)


The constituents of a Lincolnshire MP say they are "bitterly disappointed" in her after she said she would not support a junior doctor strike. Dr Caroline Johnson, a consultant paediatrician who serves as the Tory MP for Sleaford and North Hykeham, told LBC on Thursday (December 29) that she would not agree with a potential junior doctors' strike in January.

She said she would urge doctors to "think twice, think three times" before "walking out on their patients," a move she described as "fundamentally" not right. However, she has earned the ire of some of her constituents, who say she should be more supportive of their plight considering her career.

Sleaford resident Kathleen Howarth, 85, said: "Why wouldn't she support them? She's a doctor herself.

Read more: Lincolnshire MP says she would not support junior doctor strike

"What else can they do? They've got to do something to do a decent wage."

She added: "I am bitterly disappointed to hear she won't support them. And I think that's the perspective of everyone in Sleaford."


The Dorset native was also critical of Dr Johnson's perceived "absence" in the town, initially being unable to remember the name of her elected MP. Mrs Howarth added: "Sleaford is a lovely town and I want her to be more proactive.

"I don't think a lot of people really know her." Another resident, aged 80, said she agreed with Dr Johnson's stance but thought something needed to be done about the NHS "generally".

Dr Caroline Johnson on election night in 2019. (Image: Lincolnshire Live)

She said: "We all need our National Health Service, especially at the moment when everybody is under pressure. I don't support the strikes particularly but I do think they deserve a better wage, and I think they have the most universal support."

The young medics are expected to vote in favour of industrial action on January 9, joining thousands of nurses who are set to walk out on January 18 and 19 as part of a far-reaching fight over pay and working conditions. Dr Johnson did not say whether she thought the decision would be "selfish," though she said she "sincerely hoped" it would not go ahead.

The junior education minister, elected to her seat in 2016 with a majority of 32,500, has also garnered criticism in wider Lincolnshire. Sue McQuinn got in touch to criticise Dr Johnson's comments.

She wrote: "Does she really imagine they won’t think about it twice, three times or more before they take strike action? They certainly don't need her to tell them.

"It's not something anyone in the profession would do lightly. Maybe her Government should think twice about driving these people to take these measures."

Likewise, fellow resident Mel Stewart said the blame lay not with the striking workers but with the Government under PM Rishi Sunak. She added: "Perhaps Caroline Johnson should think twice about supporting her NHS colleagues throughout this trying period for all.

"This fight is about patient safety. This government, her government, is refusing to talk to NHS staff so we have been forced to take things into our own hands.

"Maybe Caroline should push Steve Barclay to open negotiations with unions like the [Royal College of Nursing], [British Medical Association] and the GMB to prevent further strikes. Only he can do that." Health Secretary Steve Barclay MP previously said he was "so grateful for the work ambulance workers and other NHS staff do" ahead of a since-delayed ambulance strike.

He added: "My door is always open to talk to trade unions about concerns around working conditions. We have an independent pay review body - which the unions campaigned to set up - and we will continue to defer to that process to ensure decisions balance the needs of staff and the wider economy."


NHS Scotland winter crisis: Staff 'are on their knees' warns doctors' union

The head of a doctor’s union has warned NHS staff “are on their knees”, as he called for “more funds need to be gathered and spent wisely” to save Scotland’s healthcare service.

By Joseph Anderson
The head of the BMA has said the NHS is "broken" in Scotland and will not be able to survive in its current form

Writing in the Scotsman today, Dr Iain Kennedy, chair of the British Medical Association (BMA) Scotland, said the nation needs to “face up to the hard truths that have been put off for far too long, and have a proper, grown-up, de-politicised national conversation about the future of our NHS in Scotland”.

“Sticking our heads in the sand, or exchanging tired political soundbites, just won’t cut it anymore,” writes Dr Kennedy.

“We put forward this idea in our BMA manifesto for the last Holyrood election, and support does seem to be growing.

“It’s clear we need to reflect on what we ask of our NHS and the levels of funding we, as a country, are prepared to provide to meet those asks. More funds need to be gathered and spent wisely.

“Despite additional investment, the current approach of pushing insufficient resources harder and harder, then blaming staff when expected standards are not reached has failed and is failing patients every single day.

“I know doctors are suffering significant moral injury as a result.”

Dr Kennedy has separately warned “there is no way that the NHS in Scotland can survive”.

“In fact, many of my members are telling me that the NHS in Scotland has died already,” Dr Kennedy told BBC Radio Scotland’s Good Morning Scotland programme.

“It’s already broken in some parts of the country. So the time is now, we need the national conversation now, it cannot be delayed any further.”


Dr Kennedy added: “Over the past two weeks I have received testimonies from nearly 200 doctors, and what they’re telling me is that the whole health and social care system in Scotland is broken.


“They are telling me that NHS Scotland is failing their patients and failing the workforce, and they’re suffering from moral injury from constantly having to apologise to their patients.”

Responding to Dr Kennedy’s remarks, a Scottish Conservative spokesperson said: “This stark message is a damning indictment of years of atrocious NHS workforce planning by a succession of SNP health secretaries, including Nicola Sturgeon herself.

“The First Minister’s decision to cut the number of funded training places for medical students at Scottish universities, when she was health secretary a decade ago, is a major factor in the staffing problems Dr Kennedy highlights.

“Scotland’s overstretched NHS is on its knees – with a shortfall of 6,000 nurses alone – and the SNP need to recruit and, crucially, retain staff if it’s to survive.

“The goodwill of dedicated frontline staff has been exhausted. They are shattered and have no faith in Humza Yousaf or his flimsy, failing Covid Recovery Plan to turn things around. If they are to stop leaving in their droves, the health secretary must be sacked now.”

Meanwhile, Scottish Labour’s health spokesperson Jackie Baillie said: “Years of SNP underfunding and mismanagement have pushed our NHS to breaking point.

“The fact is that the SNP government has failed to train enough medical professionals and has failed to retain those that we have.

“Under the SNP, the NHS is haemorrhaging staff.

“Scottish Labour would put staff training and retention at the heart of our plan to save the NHS.”

The BMA is now calling on the Scottish Government to “be brave and act now”

“Let’s harness the anger and frustration staff and patients feel to commit to working together to build a better future,” writes Dr Kennedy.

“Let’s stop putting healthcare workers in the impossible and insidious position of having to constantly apologise and be the bearers of bad news.

“Politicians on all sides must step up and start the process. It’s in their hands, and specifically the hands of the Scottish Government. With all the political attention on our NHS at the moment, I have no doubt they are listening. I also believe they do want to do the right thing.

“We need them to be brave and act now, by bringing us together and finally actually properly talking about a plan for a future NHS that is a joy to work in, and to be cared for by.

“It’s really difficult to find any optimism about the position our NHS in Scotland is in at the moment, particularly for healthcare workers in the service. But I believe if the Scottish Government commits to and indeed leads this national conversation, those out there doing all they can to provide the care we all rely on will at least finally feel they are being properly listened to.”

The Scottish Government has sought to blame NHS pressures on the coronavirus pandemic, Brexit, and winter viruses.

A Scottish Government spokesperson said: “The situation we find ourselves in is the result of pandemic backlogs, Brexit-related staff shortages and increases in winter viruses such as flu which has seen a significant rise in the last few weeks – making this winter the most challenging the NHS has ever faced. This is of course not unique to Scotland.

“Scotland has record numbers of NHS staff and we are recruiting more staff as part of our £600m winter plan and £50m investment is targeting A&E waits through services that allow patients to be treated at home or in the community.

“We have a record number of GPs working in Scotland and are committed to 800 additional GPs by end 2027, and despite the pandemic, we have recruited 3,220 whole time equivalent healthcare professionals to provide support to GPs, underpinned by an investment commitment of over £500m.

“We know the difficulties staff are facing and want to repeat our thanks to all those working across all health and social care services this winter to make sure people receive the care they need.”

Dr Kennedy added: “All the statistics tell us that it’s a desperate state of affairs. Things are as bad, or worse, than they have ever been.

“Winter is a meaningless term now – this entire year has been winter. But looking beyond the statistics, looking at the people behind the statistics, the picture being painted is even more grim and concerning.

“The experiences my colleagues have shared speak louder than anything I could say, and anything any official stats could imply.”